#La Pie (The Magpie) by Claude Monet
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Die Elster von Claude Monet (1869, Öl auf Leinwand)
#claude monet#monet#elster#magpie#winter#winter landscape#snow#schnee#snow landscape#winterscene#la pie#bird#vogel#shadow#museum#musee#art#painting#malerei#gemälde
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La Pie (1868-9) by Claude Monet
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Christmas and Snow
Somebody once said that the only way to enjoy the sight of snow is when looking at a postcard or a painting. I have spent a number of Christmas Days in hot climes such as Karachi and Melbourne and know that Christmas is not Christmas without snow. So for this Christmas blog I want to look at some of the beautiful winter landscapes created by famous and not-so-famous artists to remind me of a…
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#Art History#Blue Snow#Effect of Snow on Petit-Montrouge by Manet#Hunters in the Snow by Pieter Bruehel the Elder#La Pie (The Magpie) by Claude Monet#Love of Winter by George Bellows#Queue to a Resrvoir by Vasily Perov#Snow at Louveciennes by Alfred Sisely#Snow Effect Sunset by Camille Pissarro#Snow Scene at Argenteuil by Claude Monet#The Battery by George Bellows#The Census at Bethlehem by Pieter Bruegel the Elder#The Rooks have returned by Alexi Savrasov#View of Bazincourt#Winter Landscape by Wassily Kandinsky#Winter landscapes
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The Magpie [La Pie], c. 1868/9 Claude Monet (1840-1926)
#artist: claude monet#movement: impressionism#genre: landscape#era: 19th century#medium: oil on canvas#medium: oil#nationality: french#locale: france
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"La Pie " ( The Magpie )
Oil-on-canvas landscape painting by the French Impressionist Claude Monet - 1868–1869
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ARTCANVAS The Magpie – La Pie Canvas Art Print by Claude Monet – 26″ x 18″ (0.75″ Deep)
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Welcome to Night Vale: favorite quotes (3/?)
Fall, summer, feeling sort of but not quite sick all the time, spring.
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Monet on the Run - 2. Refusals In 1868, the Jury of the Paris Salon had still admitted Monet’s work to the Salon, but when the exhibition was rearranged mid-way to spotlight the medal winners and the government purchases, his paintings were moved to a remote gallery, known as the ‘dépotoir’ or rubbish dump. The entries of his friends Renoir and Bazille suffered the same fate. One year later, Monet’s submissions didn’t even pass the Jury’s verdict. To a large extent, he could blame it on Jean-Louis Gérome, a successful academic painter and an influential member of the Jury.
‘The Magpie’ was Monet’s other refused work of that year. Today, it is considered to be one of Monet’s best snowscapes (and there are about 140 of those).
Claude Monet, La Pie (The magpie), 1869. Oil on canvas, 89 x 130 cm. Musée d’Orsay, Paris
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